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* From the Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Correspondence to: Alan Lisbon, MD, FCCP, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, CC 470, 1 Deaconess Rd, Boston, MA 02215; e-mail: alisbon{at}caregroup.harvard.edu
| Abstract |
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Key Words: catecholamines dopamine agents sepsis splanchnic circulation
| Introduction |
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The gut is an organ that is exquisitely sensitive to systemic cardiovascular and pulmonary disturbances.3
As a physiologic response to a reduction in circulating volume, the blood is immediately shunted away from the splanchnic bed to more vital organs.4
Inflammatory states, such as sepsis, are associated with a significant increase in gut and hepatic oxygen consumption (
O2). In addition, reperfusion efforts may further compound mucosal barrier dysfunction.3
Insults such as infection, trauma, burns, surgery, or cardiac compromise may increase the metabolic rate by 20%, resulting in higher
O2. Injury to the gut can also cause it to release additional inflammatory mediators. Tissue injury in sepsis is a consequence of progressive cellular death as a result of direct cytotoxic mediators that trigger apoptosis, or of cellular hypoxia developing as a result of abnormal oxygen delivery and utilization.5
It has been suggested that inadequate splanchnic perfusion leads to GI mucosal ischemia, which in turn leads to increased permeability and bacterial/endotoxin translocation. It is postulated that this bacteria/endotoxin translocation may ultimately lead to multiple organ dysfunction. Adequate mucosal perfusion maintains the barrier function of the GI tract. Loss of this barrier may allow bacteria and bacterial toxins to pass from the lumen of the gut into the systemic circulation, initiating or perpetuating septic events.
In patients with sepsis, the metabolic demand in the splanchnic region is elevated; therefore, therapeutic strategies to increase blood flow to the area have been suggested. Resuscitation and prompt correction of hypoxia and hypotension are necessary in the critically ill patient to help prevent splanchnic ischemia. Some experience suggests patient survival is improved if cardiac output and, hence, arterial oxygen delivery are maintained above normal. Because of differences in regional blood flow, the gut and liver may actually be inadequately perfused after these attempts. Both the GI tract and the liver can sustain reperfusion injuries despite normal systemic measures of adequate tissue oxygenation. In these cases, attention to regional blood flow should be considered.
There are a number of ways to increase blood flow to the gut and liver in the critically ill, including correcting hypovolemia and maintaining an adequate cardiac output. Various inotropic agents have vasodilatory properties and may also increase splanchnic blood flow.
| Do Drugs Increase Splanchnic Blood Flow? |
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| Confounding Factors in the Studies |
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O2 and intramucosal pH (pHi) or reduce lactate production, and low pHi may reflect altered cellular metabolism, not low blood flow. Measurement of ileal blood flow is difficult in clinical practice. Many studies are performed in animals, because of the difficulty in measuring splanchnic blood flow in humans, but there are numerous differences between animals and people that may confound interpretations of the results.
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| Catecholamine Receptor Action |
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-adrenergic receptor activity. Early studies with dopexamine appeared to support its use in increasing splanchnic blood flow in the critically ill patient. Smithies and colleagues8 examined 10 patients with sepsis syndrome, acute respiratory failure, and one other organ system failure. Patients were treated with a dopexamine infusion, maximum dose of 6 µg/kg/min, to determine the clinical effects of the drug on systemic and splanchnic perfusion. Treatment with dopexamine increased gastric pHi from 7.21 to 7.28. Indocyanine green (ICG) clearance increased, demonstrating better liver perfusion while on dopexamine. The researchers concluded that dopexamine improved gastric pHi and thus splanchnic oxygenation. Maynard and colleagues6 examined 25 patients with systemic inflammatory response syndrome receiving mechanical ventilation to assess the effect of low-dose dopexamine (1 µg/kg/min) or DA (2.5 µg/kg/min) on splanchnic blood flow. This group used gastric pHi, hepatic metabolism of lidocaine to monoethylglycinexylidide, and plasma disappearance rate of ICG as measurements. Results showed that dopexamine increased pHi from 7.25 to 7.35, increased ICG clearance from 7.6 to 11.3%, and increased monoethylglycinexylidide from 4 to 10.2 mg/mL. Treatment with DA showed no changes. The authors concluded dopexamine, but not DA, increased splanchnic blood flow.
More recently and in contrast, Meier-Hellmann and colleagues7 found dobutamine and dopexamine to have no selective effect on splanchnic blood flow. They examined 12 patients with severe sepsis and treated them with volume loading and dobutamine infusion followed by increasing doses of dopexamine (0.5 to 4.0 µg/kg/min). Splanchnic blood flow was measured by pHi and ICG clearance. Results showed that the splanchnic blood flow increased proportionately to the cardiac output; however, there was no selective effect of dopexamine on splanchnic blood flow. Also observed was a pHi decrease in a dose-dependent fashion suggesting a harmful effect on gastric mucosal perfusion. The authors suggest that the use of dopexamine as an additional catecholamine after treatment with dobutamine may preclude any further ß-receptor-mediated improvement in splanchnic circulation.
Using a different measurement technique, Temmesfeld-Wollbrück and colleagues1 discovered that some areas of the splanchnic vasculature respond to dopexamine while others do not. Reflectance spectrophotometry for the assessment of mucosal hemoglobin oxygenation and concentration in the upper GI tract of septic patients demonstrated severe microcirculatory disturbances compared to healthy control subjects. Müller and colleagues4 confirmed these findings in a placebo-controlled, randomized trial. Eighteen patients undergoing elective major abdominal surgery received either dopexamine, 1 µg/kg/min, or 0.9% saline solution prior to measuring intestinal tissue PO2 and gastric intramucosal PCO2. The dopexamine treatment increased small-bowel serosal PO2 but not colon PO2 or gastric mucosal PCO2, demonstrating that there are variations in drug response by different parts of the gut.
There are some indications that the gut protection elicited by dopexamine is not fully explained by its effect on whole-body hemodynamics and oxygen transport variables alone. A mechanism of action for the ability of dopexamine to positively affect morbidity and mortality may be attributed to its anti-inflammatory properties. Byers and colleagues3 studied the effects of dopexamine, 0.5 to 2.0 µg/kg/min, on the incidence of acute inflammation in the stomach/duodenum of 38 high-risk patients undergoing abdominal surgery in a double-blind, randomized controlled trial. At 72 h postoperation, there were lower acute inflammatory changes and myeloperoxidase activity in the stomachs of patients in the dopexamine groups, demonstrating that dopexamine afforded significant histologic protection to the upper GI tract after surgery. Further evidence supporting the direct anti-inflammatory properties of dopexamine have been reported by Tighe and colleagues2 in a porcine model of sepsis and by Schmidt and colleagues9 in a rat videomicroscopy study. Another possible mechanism for explaining how dopexamine increases mucosal blood flow is the decreasing amplitude of flow motion as demonstrated by Madorin and colleagues5 in a rat videomicroscopy study.
Dobutamine
Dobutamine is a catecholamine that can increase hepatic splanchnic blood flow but does not usually change or decrease pHi. Among the various adrenergic agents available today, dobutamine has been found to most consistently decrease mucosal-arterial PCO2 difference and increase gastric mucosal blood flow. Dobutamine has been shown to improve both splanchnic oxygenation and gastric pHi in septic animals and in septic patients.10
Creteur and colleagues10 analyzed the effects of short-term dobutamine infusion on the mucosal arterial PCO2 difference and the hepatosplanchnic blood flow to determine if the adequacy of gut perfusion can be easily assessed by gastric tonometry in patients with severe sepsis. Dobutamine (5 µg/kg/mL and 10 µg/kg/mL) caused changes in the PCO2 gap, which, in turn, revealed an increase in hepatosplanchnic perfusion. The proportion of blood flow (approximately 20%) being directed to the gut, however, was not substantially different.
Nevière and colleagues11 also assessed whether dobutamine (5 µg/kg/min) or DA (5 µg/kg/min) infusion could increase gastric mucosal perfusion in a prospective randomized crossover trial in 10 patients with sepsis. Systemic hemodynamics, oxygen transport, and gastric perfusion were assessed by pHi and laser Doppler flowmetry. Gastric PCO2 was decreased with dobutamine but remained the same with DA. Gastric blood flow was reduced in both groups.
DA
The splanchnic region is replete with vascular dopaminergic receptors. DA is a commonly used vasoactive agent known to cause splanchnic vasodilation, and possibly improving regional perfusion. In one of the first human studies of regional blood flow and oxygen transport, Ruokonen and colleagues12
showed that, compared to 11 postoperative cardiac surgery patients, 10 patients with sepsis had higher splanchnic blood flow. This prospective, randomized, controlled trial examined systemic and regional hemodynamics and oxygen transport, measured by indirect calorimetry after treatment with norepinephrine or DA. They also examined splanchnic and leg blood flow, as measured by ICG infusion. In patients with sepsis, splanchnic blood flow was increased by both agents. DA increased splanchnic blood flow from 1.25 to 1.95 L/min/m2 and as a percentage of cardiac output. Norepinephrine increased splanchnic blood flow from 0.93 to 1.25 L/min/m2, but in an unpredictable fashion. This study demonstrated that septic shock is associated with major changes in regional blood flow and regional oxygen transport, which could not be predicted from systemic changes.
| Use of Inotropic Support in Cardiac Surgery |
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Berendes and colleagues14
assessed the effects of dopexamine on renal function, splanchnic oxygenation, and systemic inflammation, and subsequent acute-phase response in otherwise healthy patients undergoing CPB surgery. Forty-four patients with a left ventricular ejection fraction
0.5 were administered 0.5, 1.0, or 2.0 µg/kg/min dopexamine or placebo prior to, during, and after surgery. The dopexamine infusion increased systemic oxygen delivery, but hepatic venous oxygen saturation did not change; pHi decreased during and after CPB in all patients. Postoperative increases in interleukin-6 were lowest in the 2.0 µg/kg/min group. C-reactive protein and serum amyloid A increases in the postoperative period were also less pronounced with dopexamine therapy. Creatinine clearance improved with all doses of dopexamine. While these results were promising, the authors concluded that routine use of continuous dopexamine infusion in otherwise healthy patients undergoing CPB was not justified.
Ensinger and colleagues15
completed a randomized, controlled study of the effects of dobutamine on hepatosplanchnic blood flow,
O2, glucose metabolism, and lactate and amino acid balance in 17 CPB patients. Variables were measured by ICG clearance and PCO2 gap. Dobutamine increased the cardiac index, splanchnic blood flow, femoral blood flow, and the arterial-gastric mucosal PCO2 gap. Treatment did not change gut
O2. These results suggest that, despite the predominantly ß-adrenergic activity of dobutamine, it does not increase the splanchnic metabolic demands even when splanchnic perfusion was significantly (0.8 to 1.0 L/min/m2) improved.
Human studies are difficult to perform because splanchnic blood flow is difficult to measure clinically; hence, animal studies provide the bulk of the available data. Bastien and colleagues13 assessed the effects of CPB on splanchnic blood flow as measured by laser Doppler in three different splanchnic areas (gastric, jejunum, and ileum) of the rabbit and tested the potential of dopexamine to prevent CPB-induced decreased mesenteric blood flow. Splanchnic blood flow decreased significantly during CPB. Dopexamine improved jejunal and ileal blood flow, but not gastric blood flow. These results may help explain why pHi does not improve during CPB and also questions the use of pHi as an effective measurement of splanchnic blood flow.
A microsphere study was conducted in a pig model to determine whether low-dose DA infusion (5 µg/min) during CPB selectively increases perfusion to the kidney, splanchnic organs, and brain at low (45 mm Hg) and high (90 mm Hg) perfusion pressures.16 This randomized, crossover trial measured systemic perfusion, which was altered by adjusting pump flow rate. Investigators also examined cortical perfusion pressure, which increased from 178 mL/min/100 g at low perfusion pressure to 399 mL/min/100 g at high perfusion pressure. Treatment did not increase blood flow to the renal cortex, duodenum, jejunum, or ileum.
Positive End-Expiratory Pressure
Two animal studies from the same laboratory examined the effect of inotropic agents on the depression of mesenteric blood flow caused by positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) during mechanical ventilation.17
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Results showed that dopexamine was superior to DA in protecting mesenteric blood flow in the face of increasing levels of PEEP. Regardless, inotropic agents were not a replacement for adequate fluid loading to correct the depression in cardiac output and mesenteric blood flow associated with the use of mechanical ventilation and PEEP.
| Summary |
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| Footnotes |
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O2 = oxygen consumption | References |
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